Summit
Critical Crazy
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One thing I love about this forum is even after 12 years I'm always learning of different structures or methods for EMS system models and care across the country and the world.
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This may have been touched upon before, but the idea of a separate "nursing model" that comes up now and again confuses me. Don't nurses practice medicine? What do people like Remi/Akulahawk/Summit do, witchcraft? Pardon me if this sounds incredibly ignorant.In my system we are educated by MDs, DOs, and PAs. Nurses are not part of our education or protocols as we do not work within the nursing model or nursing philosophy. We instead work in the medical model and medical philosophy which puts us squarely within the domain of those who practice medicine.
This may have been touched upon before, but the idea of a separate "nursing model" that comes up now and again confuses me. Don't nurses practice medicine? What do people like Remi/Akulahawk/Summit do, witchcraft? Pardon me if this sounds incredibly ignorant.
When I went through Paramedic School, many of my instructors were nurses. My clinical preceptor was an RN. I did NOT learn Nursing Theory or Nursing ANYTHING from them as they followed the curriculum of the program that was built around the medical model. When you take your CPR/ACLS/PALS courses, your instructors could very well be nurses. They teach the appropriate curriculum, not the nursing slant on the subject.In my system we are educated by MDs, DOs, and PAs. Nurses are not part of our education or protocols as we do not work within the nursing model or nursing philosophy. We instead work in the medical model and medical philosophy which puts us squarely within the domain of those who practice medicine.
I'm sorry, nurses have no business doing any of this. It should be educated and experienced medics, not a nurse with a short "MICN" class. Consider if the situations were reversed and medics were giving RNs orders, would you be ok with that situation?lWhen you do transport to the hospital, many times your radio or phone reports are answered by nurses that are familiar with your protocols and who are authorized to tell you to proceed past a certain point in those protocols. My system here has exactly that. You may proceed down the protocol to a certain point and then you must contact a Base Hospital for authorization to proceed past that point. There are only a couple points that require a Base Physician Order and if you reach that, you may NOT proceed, even under "communications failure policy" which otherwise allows you to proceed past "Base Hospital Order" points.
Your authorization to practice comes from the Medical Director but your Medical Director may delegate day-to-day supervision/review of your practice to a nurse that is familiar with what you do and what's appropriate. Nurses are generally familiar with Medical Model... they have to implement parts of the Medical Care Plan too.
I didn't say that medics can't do any of this. I would be OK with educated/experienced medics filling the same role as an MICN does currently. If an RN is functioning in the field, under the same protocols as any Paramedic and had to call in and an authorized Paramedic answered the radio, I'd be OK with that. What I did do is describe the situation as it is currently, nothing more, in answer to the assertion that nurses aren't involved in EMS protocol. Currently, they are, even if only to the extent that they answer the radio when you ask for the OK to proceed past a certain point, in some systems like mine. Other places have the MICN simply taking the report, asking clarification questions, and sometimes getting the Base Physician on the radio for issuance of medical orders...I'm sorry, nurses have no business doing any of this. It should be educated and experienced medics, not a nurse with a short "MICN" class. Consider if the situations were reversed and medics were giving RNs orders, would you be ok with that situation?
Medics are fully capable of performing the role described. If I call for advice, I don't want to talk to an RN who may or may not have less background on the subject than I do.
I've done a finger thora on a cadaver... it's as easy and more reliable than a needle.Meanwhile, in Texas, there are systems going to paramedic-initiated finger thoracotomies, field ABX are a thing in some places, and we have nurse-free cadaver labs where medical directors speak of amazing things to come...
Meanwhile, in Texas, there are systems going to paramedic-initiated finger thoracotomies, field ABX are a thing in some places, and we have nurse-free cadaver labs where medical directors speak of amazing things to come...
No, nurses do not practice medicine. They practice nursing. This is why they are licensed by nursing boards and not medical boards through their states. I don't think witchcraft is part of nursing.This may have been touched upon before, but the idea of a separate "nursing model" that comes up now and again confuses me. Don't nurses practice medicine? What do people like Remi/Akulahawk/Summit do, witchcraft? Pardon me if this sounds incredibly ignorant.
I reiterate Remi's point that making such distinctions is only relevant bureaucratically or in online pissing contests.No, nurses do not practice medicine. They practice nursing. This is why they are licensed by nursing boards and not medical boards through their states. I don't think witchcraft is part of nursing.